MOTORSPORT: Mazda 787B Named Le Mans car of the 1990s by Automobile Club de l’Ouest Jury

France’s Automobile Club de l’Ouest, the organizing body behind the 24 Hours of Le Mans, recently announced the 10 race cars they believe to be most emblematic of the legendary race. One car was chosen to represent each decade of the 90 years Le Mans has been running. However, it was deemed that the 1990s could not be defined by just one car, and thus the honor was shared by the 1991 Mazda 787B and the Peugeot 905 (the sole Japanese and French cars on the list, respectively).

It should be noted that 787 driver Yojiro “Mr Le Mans” Terada and Mazda racer Patrick Dempsey were both on the jury. This may not be as prestigious as winning “Greatest Racing Livery” as decided by JNC readers, but we’re sure the plucky little autobuilder from Hiroshima is thrilled just the same.

4 Responses to MOTORSPORT: Mazda 787B Named Le Mans car of the 1990s by Automobile Club de l’Ouest Jury

I find it amazing that they voted the 787B as one of the 90’s car they believed to be most emblematic of the legendary race and yet the Automobile Club de l’Ouest followed up the win by banning rotary motors.

While I adore the 787B, it was more of an 80s relic than a 90s machine. I think the Mclaren F1, 911 GT1, or CLK GTR is more fitting for the 90s; the ‘homologated? really?…really?’ category of GT cars. Group C was all but finished by the time the 90s even started.